In Pictures: 8 privacy-destroying technologies that should scare you

Build a better mousetrap, and someone will use it to kill humans. It seems inevitable that technological advances always seem to come with misuses or some kind of maluse. The technology isn't bad, just its use.
So as technology advances, gets smaller and more accurate, it seems some people have been finding ways to spy on and intrude into our lives. I try not to fall for the tinfoil hat nonsense that you find on places like Alex Jones's site or Godlikeproductions.com, but sometimes it's hard not to. And in practice, as critical infrastructure security adviser Steve Hunt puts it, Americans are notoriously willing to give up privacy in many instances.
This slideshow originally appeared on ITworld.com.

"Privacy is not something we protect, exactly," Hunt said. "It is something that seems to have no value at all when we are the ones sharing personal information. We proudly post the entire genealogies of our children on Facebook ... However, we bristle at the thought of someone knowing something about us that we haven't knowingly shared. I don't think big brother is the government or more precisely the NSA. Big Brother is us. We are the ones installing cameras and scanning equipment to protect our private sector homes, businesses and neighborhoods. We are the ones making our lives visible and digitally recorded," he said. Presented for your consideration in this article: 12 concrete examples.

Molecular scanners that can secretly scan you from 164 feet away
Genia Photonics makes a laser scanner technology that it says is able to "penetrate clothing and many other organic materials and offers spectroscopic information, especially for materials that impact safety such as explosives and pharmacological substances." Genia claims it can identify individual cancer cells in a real-time scan or detect trace amounts of harmful chemicals in sensitive manufacturing processes.
But as always, it's not so much the technology itself as how it can be used or misused. With Genia's tech, the Department of Homeland Security will be able to scan you from up to 164 feet away for traces of drugs or explosives on your clothes, or even for changes in your biochemistry -- if your adrenaline levels are up, they might want to have...

Software that will analyze and store millions of voices
The NSA's metadata collection was just the beginning. Federal agencies and law enforcement are using a database called VoiceGrid Nation and developed by Russia's Speech Technology Center (which operates under the name SpeechPro in the United States) to scan and identify voices on phone calls within seconds.
When authorities intercept a call and they're not sure who is speaking, VoiceGrid is called into action. SpeechPro claims 90 percent accuracy if the recording is decent quality and more than 15 seconds in length.
The company's president says the software is being is used in 70 countries to collect, store, and match voice recordings of intercepted conversations. Why were they intercepted? Why do you need to know that?

Palantir Technologies, Lord of the Spy Rings
Palantir started to help PayPal fight against fraud, but has since moved into Big Data analytics for the FBI, CIA, and others. Its advisors include former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and former CIA director George Tenet.
Palantir identifies related pieces of information in dozens or hundreds of databases within an organization and puts everything together at incredible speed. It can help banks find fraudsters -- but it can know your every move. Rumors say Palantir was involved in finding Osama Bin Laden. With Palantir, the FBI can quickly assemble dossiers on U.S. citizens, "tying together surveillance video outside a drugstore with credit-card transactions, cell-phone call records, e-mails, airplane travel records, and Web search information."

Police using data-extraction devices on cell phones
A cop asks for you license, registration, and cell phone. In his car, your phone is connected to Cellebrite to download your text messages, photos, video, and even GPS data. Your four-digit security code can't hide your naughty sexting. The law is on your side in this -- for now. The Michigan State Police, the first force in the nation to adopt Cellebrite, only uses the devices after obtaining a search warrant or the phone's owner's consent. But given the histories of some police departments, I'm wary.
Cellebrite's products are used to transfer your data from an old phone to a new one at a cell phone story, so this is another case of questionable use of good technology.

Street lights that can record conversations
Illuminating Concepts makes LED-based streetlights called Intellistreets, which can auto-adjust to the brightness outside to help save power. They also include a Wi-Fi connection and built-in speaker, to stream audio broadcasts to anyone within earshot. Oh, and they also have audio and video recorders. These are supposedly to field calls for assistance; but if you're walking in a city with Intellistreets, like with Las Vegas or Branson, Missouri, how comfortable are you knowing that the lampposts have Wi-Fi transmitters, a camera, and a microphone?
Also included: proximity sensors to record pedestrian and road traffic, and optional video displays to broadcast advertising, Amber Alerts, and other "civic announcements." And yes, this was with paid for with federal funds.

The FBI's facial recognition database
The FBI is rolling out an advanced $1 billion biometric system: Next Generation Identification (NGI), a nationwide database of mugshots, iris scans, DNA records, voice samples, and other biometrics. NGI's facial recognition systems can find a single face from a pool of 1.6 million mugshots and passport photos with 92% accuracy in less than 1.2 seconds -- even using photos in which the subject isn't looking at the camera.
The NGI pilot has used mugshots and driver's licenses of known criminals -- which would have been useless to stop the 9/11 hijackers with their clean records. But the NGI database won't stop at mug shots: agents could also upload a person of interest's picture and have NGI's cameras keep a lookout.

Our TVs are watching us back
An IT consultant in England got suspicious after he noticed that his shiny new LG smart TV began showing him targeted advertisement based on programs he’d just been watching. So he used his laptop to monitor wireless traffic between the TV and his Wi-Fi receiver, and discovered every show he watched and every button he pressed on his remote control were being sent back to LG’s corporate headquarters in South Korea.
London's Daily Mail wanted to know: What if someone were giving credit card information to a shopping app that comes with these smart TVs? That might be intercepted by an identity thief. It certainly argues against a "smart TV."

Scanning kids in school
Adults may object to having their finger prints or iris scanned by a law enforcement or government entity, but kids don't know better. So why not get the info from them? Puyallup School District in Washington State plans to put palm scanning devices in all of its lunch rooms to allow students to pay for their lunch with a wave of a hand. Needless to say, their parents are furious.
Other schools, from elementary to university, are using iris scans as a replacement for traditional identification cards. There are several companies in this business, including Eyelock, BlinkSpot and Iris ID.

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